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Hermann Bachofner, RIP
By coagula | May 31, 2011 - 7:00 pm - Posted in

Word came this afternoon that gallerist Hermann Bachofner died on Monday, May 30. I worked with Hermann Bachofner a few times over the years at the Ruth Bachofner Gallery, curating two shows there more than a decade ago. He brought to America his native Swiss love of precision that translated well to the path he chose. He and his wife Ruth ran their space for more than a quarter century, maintaining a rigorous program favoring an aesthetic of precision, simplicity and serious visual pleasure.

When we were installing my show Abject Edge in the gallery in the late 90s, Hermann was not content with a television broadcasting an artwork by Carl Pope to be on the floor. He went on a mission to the store and bought a corner shelf to elevate the big screen a foot off the ground. It looked fantastic and spoke to his keen sense of what looked good as well as what worked. And I learned something. Hermann told me he had never had a television in the gallery ever, had never shown a video piece. It made me understand, deeply, that people who devote their lives to exhibiting certain types of art understand how things should look and this devotion manifests in not settling, in buying a shelf, in re-hanging an artwork a quarter inch lower or higher to get it just right.

Hermann was an engineer early in life and he was ever the curiosity-seeking puzzle solver. When announcement postcards for the show started being returned in droves, I suspected an antiquated mailing list. But Hermann went over the pile of returns and deduced that some of the post office meters were actually reading the gallery’s address on the card instead of the address on the mailing label. He started methodically covering the gallery address on the card with blank white address labels. When I mentioned that there were thousands of postcards possible coming back, he dismissed my concerns. He explained that the postal machines were likely all calibrated just differently enough that the postcards we were getting were all we would be getting. He re-sent the hundred or so cards and a few days later at the gallery he held a card up and playfully told me, “I was wrong, one more came to us that should have gone somewhere else. We’re fortunate I am not working on missile guidance systems.” That really sums him up as best I can - devoted to problem-solving, calmly jumping on a project as it emerged as a priority, and making a self-deprecating joke about the great results he produced not being perfect.

The calm that enveloped him was contagious and he was a reassuring presence, relaxed and methodical in innumerable tense situations and circumstances. Every hanging of an art show has a few disasters awaiting, but the show always went on at the Ruth Bachofner Gallery, and usually in delightful tranquility because Hermann Bachofner, a great man, was always there to help and delighted in doing so, no matter how minute the detail or dull the chore seemed. Rest In Peace.

–Mat Gleason, 5.31.11

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Summer Studio Saturday Tours
By coagula | May 30, 2011 - 12:21 am - Posted in

Where are the interesting artists? In their studios of course!

Art commentator Mat Gleason knows the inner workings of the Los Angeles art scene as well as anyone. He wants to take you on a voyage of discovery into the place where it most happens: The artist’s studio. Whether you are an art collector, investor, enthusiast or aspiring artist yourself, observing an artist in their environment will expand your understanding of contemporary art. Along the way Mat will be discussing art and art concepts in an entertaining and educational dialogue.

Come along on a tour of the LA region’s most interesting artist studios, meet the artists, see what they are working on and where they are taking the LA art scene. Each of our Saturday outings will feature visits to three artist studios. Each visit will be approximately 40–50 minutes.

You will be meeting artists at different points in their careers:

•Established artists with international reputations

•Emerging art stars

•Cutting edge experimenters

With three visits over three Saturdays, the nine artist studios you see will give you a deeper perspective into the creative process driving the Los Angeles art scene. You will see lots of intriguing art and meet the players that are shaping the art world.

Saturday Sessions are:

June 11, 18 and 25

OR

July 9, 23 and 30

June session (3 Saturdays) is $145

July session (3 Saturdays) is $145

Enrollment is limited and spaces can only be guaranteed by registering ahead of the start date. Email Mat with your contact information (matg64@gmail.com) and he will call you to accept CC payment over the phone or arrange other payment options.

Each session will begin at 11 AM and run thru approximately 3 PM. Each session will finish with lunch (bring your own) and discussion about contemporary art in the context of that day’s studio visits. You must have your own transportation to various points around metropolitan Los Angeles. Each Saturday will group artists based on proximity of their geographic location for your convenience. Guests/companions must be enrolled. No pets please. 18 and over please.

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“TEL-ART-PHONE”, curated by Mat Gleason, opens TONIGHT at Beacon Arts Building
By admin2 | May 28, 2011 - 8:03 am - Posted in

Beacon Arts Presents

TEL-ART-PHONE

An 80+ Artist Exhibition Based on the Classic Game “Telephone”

Curated by Mat Gleason

Saturday, May 28 - Sunday, July 3, 2011

Opening Reception: Saturday May 28th, 6pm - 10pm

Beacon Arts continues its Critics-as-Curators series with TEL-ART-PHONE, a unique art exhibition that investigates the creative process by mimicking the classic children’s game of “Telephone,” opening Saturday, May 28, 2011. Curated by Coagula Founder Mat Gleason, TEL-ART-PHONE, kicks-off with an opening reception featuring live painting and catering by Literati Bar & Grill from 6:00 to 10:00pm on May 28. Among the 80+ artists contributing works to the show are Ray Beldner, Tim Biskup, Coop, Sean Duffy, Carlee Fernandez, Gronk, George Herms, Rosalind McGary, Dave Naz, and Robert Williams. The exhibit runs for five weeks closing on Sunday, July 3, 2011 with a Critics-as-Curators panel discussion and brunch reception from 1:00 to 4:00pm. Artist panel discussions will also be held on three consecutive Sundays: June 12, June 19, and June 26 at 2:00pm. Beacon Arts is located at 808 N. La Brea Ave., Inglewood, CA 90302.

TEL-ART-PHONE Participating Artists - Lisa Adams, Suzanne Adelman, Anthony Ausgang, Vicki Barkley, Ray Beldner, Sharon Bell, Maura Bendett, Lynne Berman, Lili Bernard, Tim Biskup, Ilana Bloch, Justin Bower, Mark Brandvik, Bill Brewer, Wini Brewer, Sky Bruchard, Rude Calderon, Gary Callahan, Lavialle Campbell, Coop, Alex Couwenberg, Sean Duffy, Martin Durazo, Val Echavarria, Carol Es, Ruben Esparza, Roni Feldman, Carlee Fernandez, Barbara Fritsche, Yolanda Gonzalez, Gronk, Doug Harvey, George Herms, Anneke Hiatt, Iva Hladis, Virginia Katz, Barbara Kerwin, Richard Kessler, Mark Kostabi, Catherine Leach, Laura London, Vito LoRusso, Stevie Love, Leora Lutz, Michael Maas, Kara Maria, Gregory Martin, Rosalind McGary, Antonio Mendoza, Steph Mercado, Rick Monzon, Andy Moses, Amitis Motevalli, Dave Naz, Jonas Olsson, Joe O’Neill, Claudia Parducci, Christopher Pate, Josh Petker, Pierre Picot, William Rabe, Stu Rappeport, Michael Salerno, Leigh Salgado, Alex Schaefer, Joan Sebastian, Veronica Soto, Laurie Steelink, Gina Stepaniuk, Audrey Stommes, Mike Street, Sharon Suhovy, Adam Teraoka, Lava Thomas, Juan Thorp, Mike Vegas, Robert Williams, Suzanne Williams, Lisa Worksman, and Tim Youd.

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CoaguLAradio TODAY at 1pm: Artist Sermon, and “Tel Art Phone” preview
By admin2 | May 27, 2011 - 7:53 am - Posted in

“Beer & Tall Buildings”

EPISODE 007:  Solace In A Three-Legged Table

Today’s “B&TB” features a special sermon by Artist/Reverend Ethan Acres, followed by a behind-the-scenes preview of the installation of “TEL-ART-PHONE”.  The audio was documented by Coagula Administrative Assistant Bryan Chagolla, during the past few days, in which over 80 artworks were hung at the Beacon Arts Building, in Inglewood.

TEL-ART-PHONE opens tomorrow night, May 28th, at the Beacon Arts Building, from 6pm - 10pm.

CLICK HERE AT 1PM TO LISTEN

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Artist Michael Salerno Painting Process
By coagula | May 23, 2011 - 9:56 pm - Posted in

FROM THE ARTIST… One issue central to my work is the under-investigated All-Over approach to pictorial composition. Consider that Jackson Pollock was the inventor of All-Over painting – where a picture has no central point of composition and is unified by the materials an artist uses and the style with which the artist integrates these materials for the pleasure of the viewer. For all of the groundbreaking that Pollock accomplished, there have been few if any artists committing their careers to walk further down the trail he blazed. Considering that All-Over Painting is younger than, Surrealism, cinema and photography, there is ample territory to be investigated and I have been devoted to pushing the genre to new optical possibilities that retain a purity and immediacy in technique and results. -Michael Salerno

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COAGULA Weekend Bender: LA Mart, Santa Fe Arts Colony & others
By admin2 | - 6:10 am - Posted in

Bill Barminski at LA Mart

Interior crowd at Dereck Albeck at POVevolving Gallery

Also featured in this week’s Bender:  Gregory Martin, MIke Vegas, Michael Boyd, Tobias Keene, Wild Don Lewis, Mary Bonic, Marcos Lutyens, Nate Frizzell, Christopher Farr, Donna Abbate, Jett Jackson, Louiza Vick, Sparky Camponella, Julie Arnof, Randall Harrington, Gustavo Rimada, Malka Nedivi, Claire Joseph, Dennis Peterson, Greg Bach, Ahmad Morshedi, Barney O’Brien, Casey Figueroa, Gina Han

Read The Full Story…

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Angie Mason at La Luz de Jesus Gallery
By admin2 | May 20, 2011 - 5:11 pm - Posted in harley

Angie Mason

Angie Mason at La Luz de Jesus Gallery, October 2010

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CoaguLAradio: Beer and Tall Buildings, TODAY at 1pm
By admin2 | - 7:11 am - Posted in

EPISODE 006: RAMageddon

On the eve of the supposed May 21st Rapture, B&TB takes a stroll through the Marcos Lutyens exhibition at 5900 Wilshire with curator Bryson Strauss (LA Art Machine / in collaboration with BritWeek 2011) to explore a cultural harbinger of the more likely end of the world as we know it—the futurist fantasy of technological “singularity” in which machines will someday rule, hyper-evolving at an exponential rate without our help. We then skip over to a bowling alley to meet up with the web design group Philosophie for beers and technical details on how RAMageddon will actually go down, and what we can do to prepare for it.

CLICK HERE AT 1PM TO LISTEN!

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CoaguLAradio: “The Music of GenreBender”
By admin2 | May 19, 2011 - 7:21 am - Posted in

CLICK HERE AT 1PM TO LISTEN

This week’s GENREBENDER features the best tracks, selected by Leah C. Dixon, spanning musical talent from well established to up-and-coming artists.

Sit back and enjoy the journey.

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